How to Attract Passive Job Candidates and Why I Prefer the SHRM Approach
How to Attract Passive Job Candidates
In today's competitive job market, finding and attracting top talent is a constant challenge for companies. While “active” job seekers actively search for opportunities, there is a hidden pool of talent that holds immense potential: “passive” job candidates. These professionals are currently employed but open to considering exciting new opportunities.
Career advancement serves as the catalyst that propels ambitious professionals. Passive job candidates often prioritize opportunities that allow them to progress professionally. To attract such candidates, organizations should clearly define career paths and demonstrate their commitment to employee development. Highlight growth opportunities within your company, including potential promotions, mentorship programs, and ongoing training initiatives. Emphasize how the role you're offering aligns with a candidate's long-term goals, ensuring that they see a clear trajectory for their career advancement.
When recruiting passive job candidates, the importance of offering competitive compensation and comprehensive benefits cannot be overstated. These professionals, who are content in their current roles, need a compelling reason to consider making a move. Compensation serves as a tangible indicator of an organization's commitment to valuing its employees' skills and contributions. A well-designed compensation package not only rewards their expertise but also provides financial security and motivates them to excel. Additionally, comprehensive benefits such as healthcare coverage, retirement plans, and work-life balance initiatives demonstrate an organization's dedication to the overall well-being of its employees. By presenting an attractive compensation and benefits package, companies can effectively capture the attention and interest of passive job candidates, compelling them to consider the opportunities that lie beyond their current roles.
I am a big fan of the SHRM (Society for Human Resources Management) model. I have seen first-hand how the HR industry association really understands and promotes the same approach that I have found the most successful with candidates.
Overview:
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SHRM Approach-
To target passive job seekers, HR/Recruitment professionals should take the following steps:
1. Identify and strengthen the organization's employment brand
2. Assess current and projected staffing needs
3. Source passive job seekers
4. Engage passive job seekers
5. Make the application process easy and tailored to passive job seekers
Step 1: Identify and strengthen the organization's employment brand
An employment brand is a way to describe the organization's reputation as an employer. Passive job seekers are often attracted to organizations with employment brands that align with their own goals and values. Examples of strong employment brands include employers that are known for their support of community involvement and "giving back" through employee volunteering and company events; employee ownership in the organization to create unified investment in organizational growth; a fun, free-thinking workplace dedicated to innovation and collaborative contributions; and a dedication to professional development and growth to invest in long-term employment and leadership opportunities.
Regardless of the brand, once it is identified and established, work to strengthen it so word gets out to passive job seekers that your organization is a good place to work. In addition, determine where your brand is not perceived as strongly as you would like or where it is not as easily accessible, and work to improve that. Consider such questions as:
· How is the organization regarded in the community?
· On social media?
· By stakeholders, including potential job candidates?
· Is it considered an employer of choice?
· What are current and former employees saying about working here on websites like Glassdoor, Salary, and CareerBuilder?
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If your employer brand needs some bolstering, consider taking the following steps:
Step 2: Assess current and projected staffing needs
To target the right passive job seekers, you must understand your organization's current and projected staffing needs. Conduct a staffing assessment that can identify current and anticipated gaps in the organization's workforce, including knowledge and skills. This analysis will help determine which passive job seekers should be targeted and what relationships need to be built for future positions.
To assess the skills gaps that may exist in your current workforce, consider taking the following steps:
To target passive job seekers for future positions, it is important to understand anticipated staffing needs. Anticipated staffing needs can be forecast by considering the usual turnover rates in your organization, but a more accurate forecast will consider anticipated retirements and future job growth based on the organization's strategic plan. If the strategic plan includes an expansion in one area of the organization (the more sophisticated use of big data, for example) and a constriction in another (a reduction in the production of a particular good or service), you can anticipate needing more people with technical and analysis skills and fewer line employees.
Step 3: Source passive job seekers
To identify or source passive job candidates, look where those candidates look and go where they go, both physically and virtually. If you are looking for someone who can analyze big data, for example, target big data associations like the Data Science Association or the Association of Big Data Professionals, visit their job boards and attend their networking events and conferences. Other ways to source passive job seekers include direct mail marketing, tele-recruiting, and direct recruiting (contacting potential job candidates personally). Other employers create talent communities—social media websites where a network of people (alumni employees, for example) can share information—that can help source and develop relationships with passive job seekers.
Other ways to source passive job seekers include:
The key to identifying passive job seekers is to be creative. More and more companies are posting videos about what it is like to work there. Others run ads on online radio stations like Pandora because it's a place where their potential job candidates spend time. Retail companies with in-store Wi-Fi service use it to reach passive job candidates. When customers sign in to access a store's free Wi-Fi connection, employment messages appear during sign-on that link to the company's career site. Organizations also have been known to run television advertisements and use billboards and even posters to source passive job seekers.
Step 4: Engage passive job seekers
To keep passive job seekers interested, it is necessary to establish an ongoing relationship with them.
Keep in mind that passive job seekers are generally happy with their current job and will not be willing to leap into another job without serious consideration. This makes relationship building a must when trying to engage passive job seekers.
That relationship must be built over time. Don't pressure passive job seekers to move quickly. To start building the relationship, engage them with authentic communication (whether that is through phone calls, social media, blogging, e-mails, etc.). Ask them about their short- and long-term career goals. Send them targeted white papers or other content-rich information in their areas of expertise to keep them engaged and to enhance their receptivity to future contact. Keep in touch and keep them engaged using personalized contacts until an appropriate job opening becomes available. Work to establish real relationships with passive job seekers and understand that it is a long-term commitment.
Another way to build that relationship is to send passive job seekers recruitment marketing materials via e-mail. This will help them learn more about the organization, and by sending it electronically, it will help you learn about who opens the e-mail blasts and what each recipient clicks on. You can also gather data on who is not opening the messages, who unsubscribes, etc. Those analytics can help you learn more about which candidates are more open to being recruited and which are not, as well as which marketing campaigns are working, or which are not.
Another way to build on that relationship is to understand what passive job seekers want to know. They want to understand the company culture, the employee experience, and the job. This is where having a strong employment brand is important—passive job seekers will likely look at Glassdoor and similar sites to see what current and former employees are saying about the organization. Consider sponsoring live events, such as open houses or happy hours, and invite sourced passive job seekers so they can find out more about your organization.
Step 5: Make the application process easy and tailored to passive job seekers
The last hurdle in targeting passive job seekers is to convince them to apply for the job. To do so, consider making the application process easy to access and to complete. According to SHRM's Checklist: Recruiting Quality Hires, the best performers are often passive job seekers who lack either the interest or the time in going through a cumbersome application process. Online applications that require excessive click-throughs or that are not designed for mobile access may discourage passive job seekers from completing the application.
Finally, if you get to the interview stage, there are a few things not to do when dealing with passive job seekers:
Gerente de Gente & Cultura | Bernhoeft
1yHey, Eric! This is a very good step-by-step. I started to study for SHRM and these tips are incredible, thanks for sharing! :)